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I, Wabenzi

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Some time ago Rafi Zabor sat down to write a brief narrative of the year 1986. That was the year he set out across two continents in a used Mercedes--"Wabenzi" is the Swahili word for a member of the Mercedes-owning class--to buy a grave stone for his friend Mahmoud Rauf and to outrun the shadow of his own parents' recent death.

But like a boat against the current, the writer was drawn back into the his father's escape from the Nazis, Rafi's own Brooklyn boyhood surrounded by the fractious, Zabors and Zaborovskys, and the anguished--sometimes farcical--spiritual journey that led Zabor from Brooklyn to Turkey by way of Coltrane, the thirteenth-century mystic Muhyiddin Ibn ‘Arabi, the McGovern campaign, Gurdjieff, a shoe salesman named Gogol, and the cataclysmic months Zabor spent studying (and whirling) amid a band of Sufis in rural England. The result--the first of a projected four volumes--is one of the most original, capacious, and vivid narratives of the last few decades, a real-life Bildungsroman dealing with an expanded range of human experience, from matters of life and death to a piece of what lies beyond them.

Straight from the unchartered territory between Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and Tristram Shandy , I, Wabenzi lifts a corner of the known world as if it were the edge of a curtain, and begins to show a reality new to our literature gleaming on the other side.

472 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 2005

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About the author

Rafi Zabor

6 books16 followers
Rafi Zabor (born Joel Zaborovsky, August 22, 1946) is a Brooklyn, New York–based music journalist - and musician-turned-novelist.
Rafi Zabor was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. He has worked and recorded as a jazz drummer and written about music for Musician, Playboy, and the Village Voice, and about dervishes in Istanbul for Harper's. His novel, The Bear Comes Home, won the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1998 and was voted one of the Los Angeles Times's Best Books of the Year. He still lives in Brooklyn, where he is finishing the second volume of I, Wabenzi.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Jason.
50 reviews1 follower
March 11, 2012
I am through several concentricities related to the communities that Zabor describes in the book, so I read with a good deal of interest in the history. The time narrative is quite confusing, though familiar to those on the mystic path. While the descriptions of the English community of Beshara were indeed hokey (to remention a previous reviewer), they are also accurate to the conflict inherent here. It all seems silly until you step on the path. I can't recommend it for the outsider after one reading, but plan to do another reading, hoping it brings the story into more focus.
Profile Image for _.w.I.m._.
1 review1 follower
Currently Reading
June 16, 2009
hardly started yet...
I am studying this book by comparison to Robert Anton Wilson's Cosmic Trigger I.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews